A trio of eagle chicks are growing up live on public webcam and doing well, according to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

The chicks -- thanks to help from their parents -- have done an "excellent job" of surviving the cold spring, but still face danger from thunderstorms, high winds and predators as spring slowly shifts to summer, according to the DNR's EagleCam page.

Great-horned owls, raccoons and even other eagles remain threats to the chicks, whose parents feed them a steady diet of catfish, squirrels, pigeons, rabbits, duck and even muskrat, the DNR said.

The eagle chicks are about a month old and about the size of a crow. In another month, they will be getting ready to leave the nest.

The parents of three eagle chicks on the DNR EagleCam preparing to feed their offspring a fish Wednesday morning, April 23. (DNR)

The DNR's camera was a hit last year, attracting more than 72,000 unique visitors from nearly 100 countries and pulling in more than 15,000 visits each day.

The American bald eagle was pushed to the brink of extinction but has made a comeback. Webcams like the DNR's have grown in popularity -- an "eagle cam" in Decorah, Iowa, went viral in 2011, generating more than 200 million views from around the world.

The EagleCam nest is in the Twin Cities, but the exact location is withheld to prevent crowds that might disrupt the eagles, according to the DNR.